Where does the energy come from? You’re saying all the stars
are in a galactic circuit – does the energy flow from star to star?
Where is the energy coming from, or is it just an ongoing circuit – how
would you describe it?

As far as we can see – and when I say ‘see,’ I mean that radio
telescopes are very important in the electric universe, because they can
detect radio waves, and detect their polarization. The polarization of
the radio waves allows you to map the magnetic field directions in
space. Once you’ve done that, it’s a given in plasma physics that
electric currents will flow along the direction of the ambient magnetic
field lines. So in other words, you can begin to trace the circuits in
deep space.

And
we find the galaxies themselves arranged like Catherine Wheels – that’s
the great spiral galaxies – along intergalactic power lines, what are
called Birkeland currents. They’re like giant twisted pairs of electric
currents which flow through space. In various places, if the density of
matter – the gases and dust in space – are sufficient, these pinch down.
It’s called a magnetic pinch [or z-pinch]. And in pinching down, they
scavenge the matter from the surrounding space and squeeze it, heat it,
rotate it, and form the stars that we see. But they do that in a
particular pattern which we can reproduce in the laboratory. And that
pattern is the spiral galaxy.

It’s an organic picture of the universe, and it’s a connected
picture. We’re not isolated islands in space, stars are not isolated,
they’re connected electrically and gravitationally. So it’s a completely
new way of looking at our place in the universe.